Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on 8th straight loss

MINNEAPOLIS — The Chicago Bears have gone from finding different ways to squander game-winning opportunities in crunch time to getting blown out.

While Monday night’s 30-12 loss to the Minnesota Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium was a relatively close game score-wise until the end of the third quarter, it never felt like the Bears had much of a shot.

The defense battled tough — the Vikings only outgained the Bears 329 to 284 in total offense — but the Bears were a wreck on third down and couldn’t overcome a slew of self-inflicted errors in losing for the eighth consecutive time to fall to 4-10.

Here are 10 thoughts from the Week 15 loss.

1. With the losses mounting and clear evidence that firing the head coach and offensive coordinator didn’t magically change the fortune of the season, self-doubt is creeping in.

Bears quarterback Caleb Williams walks off the field after a loss to the Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Dec. 16, 2024. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)
Bears quarterback Caleb Williams walks off the field after a loss to the Vikings at U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis on Dec. 16, 2024. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

It’s human nature, and the frustration is piling up for a team that hasn’t won since Oct. 13 in London against the Jacksonville Jaguars. The Bears haven’t won a true road game since the Vikings on Nov. 27, 2023. Minnesota was quarterbacked then by Josh Dobbs and the Bears prevailed 12-10. Their eight-game losing streak ties for the second-longest single-season stretch in club history.

The defense played pretty hard. It was a big improvement over the previous week when the San Francisco 49ers were lighting up the secondary with big plays all over. Yes, the Vikings connected on too many third-and-long situations, but it was a battle for QB Sam Darnold. The Bears did a nice job against Justin Jefferson again as the star receiver had seven catches for 73 yards on 13 targets with a 7-yard touchdown reception in the first quarter when the Bears offense was shut out once again.

The Bears actually didn’t score in the first half for the third consecutive game. Their slow starts that have affected the first quarter all season — and more on that in a little bit — have actually spread to the second quarter now.

But the defense did what it could, especially after Caleb Williams was stripped on a blindside sack by Jonathan Greenard set up Minnesota on the Bears’ 29-yard line for its second offensive series. Greenard was shot out of a cannon past rookie left tackle Kiran Amegadjie, who started in place of Braxton Jones who missed the game with a concussion.

It was a quick 10-0 hole for the Bears and that deficit reached 13-0 before halftime.

The Bears turned it over on downs twice in the first half. Running back D’Andre Swift was stopped for no gain on the Bears’ 39-yard line on fourth-and-1 on the first series of the game. Swift was stymied for no gain on fourth down again in the second quarter, this time at the Minnesota 29-yard line when the deficit was still only 10 points. Left guard Teven Jenkins pulled to the right side on the play and Swift tried hitting the A gap when he was bottled up by Vikings linebacker Blake Cashman.

“My responsibility is to read the A gap out,” Swift said when asked where the play was designed to go. “It was fourth-and-1 and there was a crease to the left. I was trying to get the 1 yard. The A gap was kind of bottled up. I tried to hit something with speed. I tried to make something happen. It was tough.”

Said interim head coach Thomas Brown: “Wanted to be aggressive going into the game. Was kind of a point of emphasis for our unit to be able to stay on the grass and make some plays. Backfired early.”

Column: Chicago Bears seem to have little left as an astounding losing skid drags on to 8 games

The Vikings entered with the league’s third-ranked run defense, and Swift had more success than he did in the first meeting this season, carrying 19 times for 79 yards. The Bears used DJ Moore in the backfield some and kept things balanced. They simply couldn’t pass protect well enough to get the ball downfield in the passing game.

Once they fell behind and couldn’t convert fourth downs, well, the defense wasn’t going to hold Minnesota all night.

“Those are things you gotta just be able to get in spite of how you block it up,” tight end Cole Kmet said. “We’ve just gotta find a way to get those and we didn’t get those. Tough, for sure.”

Vikings wide receiver Jordan Addison (162 yards) and tight end T.J. Hockenson (114 yards) both had huge games in the Week 12 meeting at Soldier Field when Minnesota had far too many explosive plays. The defense tightened up here as Darnold was 24 of 40 for 231 yards and one touchdown with one interception by Tyrique Stevenson in the end zone. The Vikings ran the ball for 114 yards, one more than the Bears got.

But the Bears were 1 for 12 on third down (their worst showing since going 1 for 14 in Week 10, Shane Waldron’s final game as offensive coordinator) and they committed nine penalties for 93 yards. That’s too much to overcome against a surging opponent — Minnesota (12-2) has won seven in a row now — on the road.

“It really just hasn’t been our year,” strong safety Kevin Byard said. “I think our margin of error is very small. We were playing pretty good and then toward the second half the (pass interference calls) really hurt us. They were able to extend those drives. That’s how it’s gone.”

Source link

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *